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Exeter Times, 1902-6-19, Page 6Genuine art r7s Little Liver 1111s. lituet Bear SIgnoture Of See Pne.Slalite Wrapper Below, Visor 5:otRn and 35 easy to teas) as eager. CARTEn ITTLE READACRE. rizt DIZZINES& rem eiLlousmatt. FOR TORPID LIVER.. FOR CONSTIPATION,. ,Foei 6 FOR SALLOW SKIN. FOR TOE COMPLEXION i Fag faXIMV.E1RIM MUcrrakv15>cottiVrunc. I entreey vegotablea.dereeea r AVM CURE SICK I4EADACHE. FOR DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY, COLIC, CRAMPS, PAIN IN THE STOMACH, AND ALL SUMMER COMPLAINTS. ITS EFFECTS ARE MARVELLOUS. IT MTS LIKE A CHARM. - RELIEF ALMOST INSTANTANEOUS. Pleasant, Rapid, Reliable, Effectual, EVERY HOUSE SHOULD HAVE IF. ORR YOUR ORUGOIST FOR IT. TAKE NO OTHZR. PRICE, - 350, URDOC LOOD E=D BITTERS Is a purely vedaable System Renovator, Blood Purifier and, Tonic. A medicine that acts directly at the same time on the Stomach, Liver, Bowels and Blood. It cures Dyspepsia, BiliOUsCOSS, Constipation, Pimples, Boils, Head- ache, Salt Rheum, Running Sores, Indigestion, Erysipelas, Cancer, Shingles, Ringworm or zay disease arising from an impoverished or impure condition of the blood. For Sale by nit woggle* THAT'S THE SPOT! Right In the email of the back. Do you ever stet a pain there? If eo, do you know what it rneane 7 It 16 b. Badkachca. A sure sign of Kidney Trouble. Don't neglect it. Stop it in thee. If yeu don't, serious Kidney Troubles are Sint to follow. DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS cure Backache, Lame tack, Diabetes, Dropsy ad all Kidney and Bladder Troubles, Prilese ?coca a hox or 3 feit$1.25,, all 4os;09. III0041N KIDNEY PILL Go. Torento, Ont. TI1ESE BOIE Men Who Meet a Soldier's Death Are Not Dead, :altered itheoretue to tit of the ogruement e Osumi*. in the yew ise Thousand We* glia. dted And Two, h), WillIAM Bally, a Tomato. At Om Department a Agricultitie, OttAtm) clespateh from Chicago sayst Bev. Frank De Witt Talraage preach- ed from the following text: Ezekiel xXxvii, 8, "Oau these b.olies live?" A ,dark, gruesome valle3r, peopled with the strangest of all strenge hosts, a great army of bleached skeletons, is the scene of the pro- phet's vision.. Amid the millions and billions of dry bones there is not the gleam of one eye, the beat- ing of one heart, the welcome ef oxie handclasp. All aro motionless. All are dead. Then, in the silence, there comes a, voice Asking the mo- mentous question, "Can these befies five?" And, strange to 'say, as if in. answer, the dry bones begin • to move, the joints, like rusty hinges, creakino from long disuse. The 'dif- ferent aeletons lift themselves and stand up. Then, stranger still, these skeleton forms sLoo o clown, as we would to gather the fresh, clean linen after a morting bath, and they clothe themselves in garments of flesh and blood. God first asked Ezekiel whether the dry bones could live. Then God showed the pro- phet by visual manifestation that they could. INSPIRATION OF EXAMPLE.., The dead of our battlefields are in- tensely alive to -day in their inspir- ing examples. Every true soldier knows what 1 mean by the over- whelming power of a personal ex- ample. It is the ability which a brave leader, by a deed of heroism, has to instil the courage of his own life into other lives. There comes a crisis in the battle.- What does the assaulting brigade coinmander do? Does he keep his position in the rear of his troops, where he has a right to stay? Does he send one of his - tail officers to lead in the charge? Does he look after his own safety? Oh, no. He "draws his sword and steps to the front of his brigade. He hurriedly utters a few inspiring words. He says: "Men, the safety of the whole army depends upon this move. Either we must capture yon- der hill and break that opposing line, or else the whole force must retreat or surrender. Some of us may lay down our lives there. Will you follow me, neon? I ask no man to go where I am not reaay to lead. I ask no man - to charge where it may not be possible for hiln to step over my dead body. Men, -will you go? Will you go?" And then ali. clown the line of throats there comes the hoarse answer: "Aye, general, we will go! We will go!" This was .the way Marshal Ney did when he led tbe Old Guard down into the ravine of Chain, where the Waterloo tragedy was practically ended. This was the way Richard Neville,. Earl of Warwick, did upon the battlefield of Barnet. When the great king- maker saw that his troops were be- ing routed, he rodeto the top of the hill and dismounted. There, within sight of his men, he drove his sword into the heart of his. noble war charger. Then, hitiong cut off all possibility of personal escape, he called his troops, saying: "The commander of the onaglish forces is here to conquer or die! Will his men be willing to die with him?" The retreating soldiers gathered around\ their nolle leader aad died by thousands as the Earl of War- wick himselfdeed. War may be hell, as has been bluntly declared, but by the gleme.of the hot,- biasing, demoniac flam, es of that ateifut . in- ferno axe seen the heroic dieSs of inany whose noble lives have been tried arid purified by the Ores, of an eartlay martyrdom. - -A BATTLEFIELD BEQUEST. . The dead of our battlefields are in- tensely alive to -day in the influence of the sorrowing loved ones who were left bereft. Sometimes we aro apt to erroaeously believe that the only sufferings of war were to be found in the gunshot wounds and the swamp fevers, in, the heartrend- ing cries of "Water! Water!" heard at night from the wounded lying be- tween the contending lines, in. the colds, the heats, the hunger, the weariness and. the homesickness suf- fered by the men at the front. But I have always believed that the wives and mothers and the sisters and sweethearts who stayed at home to weep suffered, far more than the husbands and sons and brothers who donned their uniforms and wept forth to die. Think of their sad, weary nights! Think of their start- led ears whea the rumors were heard that a great. battle was about to be fought! Think Of their wet eyes, scanning the long newspaper columns of the dead and Missing! That awful word "missing!" Think of the poverty which the young widow had -to face, with four or five children at her back! We honor the dead sold- iers who wortfhthe ilvery of Liberty. Wo ought also honor the wiefee arid mothers, the sweethearts and the sistene. who were to give these soldiers as a eacrifice, as well tie the heroes who were -Willing to OUR CONSECRATED HOMES. . The dead of our battlefields are intensely alive to -day boa:wee they have proved that the strength of this country is to oe found in the multitudes of its eoneecrated homes and not in the Site of its standing arniiee. When war breaks °et, a na- tion has to use the ships Which it has constructed in times of peace. It takes years to build a floating fight- ing machine, But what I have said is true hi reference to a, standing arielyo A eoulitry acme not need, save in times of war, to call the keenest brains, the steongest alerts alai the brawniest bodies from the 000rintione of Peace and hare the natloil groaning under the weight of useless taxation. It floes not need to have fewer xnerchanis, fewer selleol teochers, fewer lawyers mid ministers and mechanics and. farmere In order to have more privates and lieutenaats and eapeattis and majors and eolonels and generals. If we have the right kind of homes, there will be Officers and privates ready to protect the country from a, foreign foe whenever they are needed, And what kind ef fighting men do Volun- tears - make? The very best the world has ever seen! DEEDS OF HEROISM, A man. ,never fights as well as when he is a civilian, taken out of the ordinary walks of life, to. fight Lor the defence of his oven home and native land. Where in all the pages of history can you find greater deeds than those exhibited by volunteers. Ah, in this land of the free and the bravo we do not want a greater. standing army 1 We do need, how- ever, more consecrated homes '• we do need more fathers and molliers who will build the right kind of family altars ; we do need tho right kind of Christian churches, where those children can be brought in contact with, God ; we need those Christian boys and girls started in the right kind of avocations. Then -when war comes, if it must come the Christian homes of the moth and the south, the east and the west, will yield up their sons for the battle and their daegffters for the field hospitals. The Christian dead of our battle- fields are intensely alive to -day in the heavenly recognitions which have been given to them. Impossible is it to suppose that God would allow his servaots who died upon, the battlefield to go unrewarded, In the beautiful sermon upon , the mount Christ pronounced a blessing on those whose lives were full cif tears and heartaches, poverty and persecution, slander and death. Do not Christ's words apply- to those brave men ?• Did they not sutler enough ? Were not their wounds deep enough ? Did not they hunger enough and have homesickness en- ough ? Did not many a, fair cheek - ed boy under his blanket at night sob himself to sleep, • or, unable to sleep, keep ou crying, "Oh, mother, mother, if I could only 'see mother!" In one of the national museums I saw a Bible which had saved a sol- dier's life. When the young man left home, • his mother gave it to him. In battle he was cm-re/leo it in. his coat pocket just over -the heart. A flying bullet. almost cut its way through the Bible, but it was stop- ped at one of the leaves of the four gospels. Did not many a dy- ing soldier have one of these Bibles in his hand ? Did he not weep over it when he was dying far away from. home ? Cale God forget his Chris- tian soldiers wbo died upon the bat- tlefield ? No, no 1 The Bible des- cribes the entrance into heaven of a mighty host marching through tee gates as before the reviewing stand of an earthly ruler. St. John in apocalyptic vision cried out in rap- ture as he saw them, "Who are these who are arrayed in white robes, and whence came they ?" There must have ,been many seen by his prophetic eye who came from our battlefields to whom the answer that he received would apply, "These are they wbich came out of great tribulatiOn and have washed their robes and made them white in the- blood of the I.A.mb." AN INCIDENT- OP THE CRIMEA. When the English soldiers canie back from the Crimea war, all Lon- don turned out to greet them: After they had marched. past, the review- ing stand Queen Victoria: and the piece consort arose to receiveothose heroes who were to 'be decorated with medals. As each, soldier ap- proached, the Queen, -with her own hand, pinned the medal upon the breast of the man she wished to honor. Some of those soldiers had an empty sleeve - some came on erutehee ; some had their heads bandaged. At, last there come a litter.. In it was carried the physi- cal wreck of a man. Both of his legs had been ehot away. One of his arms was gone. His body had sim- ply been riddled with bullets. Then the queen, with tears in her eyes, bade the bearers halt. ,She left her Place and descended the steps of her stand to the side of the litter. She bent over the poor ecteran. ein ace count. of his sufferings the queen. wished to honor him more than any of the rest. So the more the Chris- tian dead of our battlefields suffered the More Christ has honored them. Therefore the more are they alive to -day in the heaverily reunions, "Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends." Everyone of the dead heroes paid the greatest of all et:orifice5 for his country,. They gave their IuICS in order that others niight live. May we iv:Wee that when we servo leer. Lord and Master best, then we serve best Our nation. May the sorrowand the sadness, . the sufferiegS°and the deaths instill in our hearts a pro - lore of peace and a, deeper consecration to him whose name is the Prince of Peace, Lei us labor to so disseminate theteachings of Jesus thtit war in the future shall beconee ab moessibility, Thee shall be only gospel' peace. Then ell the people Will not only love the Lord their awl with all their hearts, but they shall love their neighbors as themselves. Then war ehtell be re- memberedas the -sad result of dis- serisions that are no longer settled by the dword, but are submitted to the arbitranieht at the Prince. of Pettee, Then. the glory of the Lord shall cover this land tes the Waters toyer the Sea. THE S. S. LESSON, INTERNATIONAL LESSON, JUNE 22, Text of the Lesson, ROM,xiii.,8- 14,, Golden Text, Rein. xiii., 12. S. Owe no man anything but to love One another, 'Sur he that loveth another hail •fellillea the law, . We are asked to turn aside from -oor etudies in the Acts to what the ceramittee term a teniperande le -s- emi, but time° who are acquainted With our lesson notes kuow• thet we fievee turn aside from the gospel of the grace of God. and the glory of God for any other topic, believing that the gospel inctudes all else and that temperance means the tallest possible self control and eelf renun- ciation in. every form. Our lesson is a part of the practical portion of this epistle, beginaing with chapter xii, 1, ' beseech you therefore, bre- thren, by the mercies of God," and all thet follows is enjoined upon the believer becouse of the free justifica- tion by grace given to the penitent sinner through the redemption that is the Christ Jesus (Rom. iii, 24). Apart from the redemption that is in Chu ist no amount of so-called tempexance counts fOr anything in the light Of eternity,. but when through His blood wo enter into the place ot ”no condemeation and no Separation" (Rom, viii, 1, 38, 39), then God expects us to walk no longer after the flesh, but after the Spirit and let Ilia fulfill in tie the righteousines.s of the lati Mono viii, 4). 9.. Thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.' This is the Lord's own summary of what is called the second table of the low or duty of our follow man (Matt. xxii, 3640). Some one has said that love is the law itself id in.anifold action, an obligation nev- er fully discharged. It certainly was fulfilled perfectly in oer Lord Jesus Christ, and ile is the end • of the law for righteousness to . every one that believeth. (Bona x, When. BP set the law, the Ten. Com- mandments, before any ode, saying, "This do and thou shalt live," He was endeavoring to convince him of sin that he might turn to Him. for righteousness, for the law cannot give life, and, by the deeds of the law no one is justifleO, bemuse he cannot fully keep the law, so that the law simply shuts one's mouth and sends guilty and lost to Christ (Rom. in, 19, 20; Jas. ii, 10; Gal. 21-2a.) -10. Love worketh no ill to his neighbor; therefore love is the ful- filling cif the law. • Love studies to please and there- fore cannot injure. The .man, who takes another's money and for it gives hin that which deseroys his reason and beggars himself and his family is not showing any love, but the most intense selfishness. He is saying, "I must have this man's money, no matter what becomes of him." 11. And that, knowing the time, that now it is high time to awake out of sleep, for now is Our salvo tion nearer than when we believed. A condition. of indifference to things that should interest us is a state of sleep The most remarkable instances of the sleep of believers is that of Peter, James and John, heavy with sleep on the Mount of Transfiguration in the presence of His glory and actually sleeping in the presence of His great agony in Gethsemane. Think also of the eleop of Samson in the lap of Delilah and its consequences to him, and of the storm at sea when the heathen. cried to their gods and the only man on the ship who knew the living and true God was fast asleep,and the captain had to awaken him, Saying, "What meanest tnou, 0 sleeper?" Does it not seem as if millions of heathen perishing in their blindness are crying to the church to -day in the san.le words? .. • • 12. The night is faa spent, the day is at .hand. Let us therefore cast off the -works of darkness and let us put on the armor of light. • We were once darkness, but now wo are light in the Lord, and we should walk as children of light (Eph. v, 8). Light luits no fellow- ship with darkness at all. If we Say we have fellowship with Him and walk M darkness, we lie and do not speak the truth. Let us there- fore walk in the light, as He is in the light (II. Cor„ vi, 14; I John i, 5-7.) Although we have entered into the twentieth century since Christ came, it is still the world's night, and no amount cf . progress can bring the day which awaits His coming. 13. Let us walk honestly as in the day not in. rioting arid clrunkenneso, not in claxnbering and wantonness, not ine strife and envying. - These are varied forms of. intem- perance, imparity and passion to all of .which . the believer is to reckon himself dea,d. Now, we are to watch and be sober; putteng on the breast- plate of' faith and love and for a helmet the hope of salvation (I These. v, 6, 8). Denying ungodliness and worldly lusts we ore to live soberly, righteously and godly in this present world, looking for our Lord Jesus whe gaee himself for us that •• He might redeem us from all inigeity rind purify ento.IIimself dpeople for His own possession (Tit.' ii, 12e14). ' 14, But, put ye on the Lo•rd Jesus Christ Midmake not proviolon, fo5. the flesh to fulfill the Mete thereof. We co.° Mid in Gal. ill, 27, to have put oo Christ, in Eon iv, 22-24, to pot, off the old mat which is cor- rupt and put on tile new nom which, after God, is created in righteous- ness: and trLie 13.0]the95, , Se also in Col. iii, 9, 10. We are in Christ, and Christ le , in us ; the Palate-, Son and Holy Spirit- hove come 'to (Oven in. 'us (John xvii, 21, 26 ; sie, 11, 23), and all they ask is that we yielh fully to them, that they may fill us with joy and peace and mani- fest the life of Jesus in us, The IRO ed 'Kingdom has 23 dukes; S»aiti31. FOR THE ROYAL VISITORS1 snt, wxr,,LIAn corxrx,LE, MAS- TER OP OEUEMOOTIES, Trouble With the Indian Princes— They Are Very jealous of One Another, The Shah of Pasta who has been spending a week with the Emperor William, makes no secret of 1uj dis- Satisfaction with the manner in whica he was treated he Rely, says Londoo letter, He has not yet grasped the full meaning of the state of affairs that exists in Rome, ow- ing to which he was unable to viStit the Pope without the undignified make-belie,ve of etarting from the house of a diplomat direetly accre- dited to the Vatican. He suspects that it was part of a deliberate plan by the Italian court and government to shorten his stay in Italy, and all the numerous and elaborate explana- tions made have failed to remove his suspicion, The weather and other things com- bined to upset the Shah's nerves from the moment be set his foot io Italy. The Shah at present has no. intention palming in London during the coronation festivities, for .which the British court officers are devout- ly thankful. Certainly they have enough work on hand. The man who ie ehiefly responsible for any hitch is Sir William Col- ville, Master of Ceremonies to the King. Already this unhappy indivi- dual only manages 'to get six hours sleep a night, so that, according to the law of averages, he will be un- able to sleep at all when the coron- ation tide is et its flood. Ile had no difficulty with the first visitor, King Lewanika of Barotse- land, the fat negrowho was formal- ly presented to King Edward on Thursday. Nor, indeed, was that to be expected; for Lewanika was too grateful for being permitted to corm to give any trouble. He is a dis- reputable ruffian, 'who for years wal- lowed in. the blood of his own and adjoining peoples. To-tia,y, although he is still a. pagan, he is one of the pets c,f aborigine protectiou and mis- sionary societies. Prince Sheng, too, representing the Emperor of China„ is accepted with- out grumbling. Pine quarters were prepared for him at the Hotel Cecil, although, judging from a remark he made on his arrival on Thursday, he had expected to reside at the royal palace. WHERE- TROUBLE IS FEARED. It is with the Indian Princes that Sir William Colville fears • trouble. They number a round dozen and all of then: are bringing embarrassing- ly large suited, They are intense- ly jealous of each other and tenac- ious of the smallest right or priVie. lege Of their rank and precedehce, even to the exact' number of gone fired in theira hoopoe which is, of course, regulated bY iprecedenta But this will not prevent any one of theni trying to steal a march on the other: Another very busy and anxious man is Chief Inspector Melville, the head of the political police. His re- sponsibility is the physical safety of every European prince brought here by the coronation, and it is a grievous one, for it has to be sus- tained by the very inadequate means of his department, This is =ways shorthanded and stare -ed for money. It is now being reinforced by detectives loaned by the German, Russian, Austrian and Italian governments, and Inspector Melville has set himself the task of locating and keeping under constant observation every known anarchist, British or foreign resident, perman- ently or temporarily in London. The precautions for guarding the King's pereen during -coronation week are said to be ektraordinarily elaborate and complete. . The bishops who will. take part in the coronation ceremonies have now been fixed .uporr. The burden oCthe ceremonial will, of course, rest upon the Archbishop of Canterbury. The assietant bishops will be the arch - bishop of York, who will crown the Queen; the Bishop of London, who will preach the sermon; the l3iehop of Ely, who will carry the paten -and read the Epistle; the Bishop of sWin- chester, who will carry the chalice and read the Gospel; the Bishops of Durham, Bath and Wells, who will support the King on his left and right; and the Bishops of Oxford and Norwich, who will perform a similar office for the Qpeen, the former being a prelate .of the Order of the Garter. All these will wear copes. The oth- er unofficiaaing .bishops , wear rochets and crimson chimeres, The Dean of 'Westminster mid his five =Rolls Will also be attired in crim- son copes over their surplices. • EVERY DAY CHANGES. Meat while, elaborate prectoitiohs are being talthe to minimize the chance of any d danger from a crush. The streets approaching the rout of the processioa will be shut off, not as heretofore by lines of cavalry, bet by great gates, ten feet high,* hung on poste, fixed in collet -ate socket, Ond placed 20 feet back frem the .Ourb of the main thoroughfare. The gates can be opened hi either way in case of emergency, Tim low- er branches of trees will be lopecel to prevent t toe cl ineb g The present in ten Lion of the pol ice is to tegultte traffic during tlionight Every day sees a notiteeble ad- dition to London's garb of timber, which, in its present condition, is hideous beyond description Special entrances to the nave and galleries of Westminster Abbey have leeen made by removing portions of twe great windows, Avhich have been con- verted, into doorways, access to which is gained by a great wooden staircase, which rises from the sad- ly battered turf outside the -Abbey. The narrow streets of the city de not afford roorn for many stands, but galleries are being -built On al- most inftecessible positions, such as the very apex of tlie Royal Ex- changeand tba top of the 13ank of England, from which the view will be alinost directly dawn onto the heads of the people in the ?rocas- • • OF DEVOINISH1RfE. • 44444i444444-41,44:4444-444*-414044woosstit, TH log ltfiffilfee )4*.% TH E (.2U E KNI and THE DUC ESS g I iA Remarkabk Offer. 1 Here is the best offer ever made in this conimunIty. By a eery excel lent au. we rengement made with the Family ITereld and Weekly Star of Montreal we are w ensued to offer Ton BZVV.Ell Timms and that great Family Papor, the iFamily eleeald and Weekly Star, for one year for the small sum of 161.75 and in- clude to each s.. heeriber three oeautiful premium pictures, of whloh the follow. 0, Ing is a brief cleseripa-e KING EDWARD VIT,—True to lit% e beautiful portrait size 18 x 24 inches, ou beautiful heavy white satin finished paperfor framing. This portrait ee has been taken singe his necession to the throne, and is the very lateet and beet 40 obtainable. It cannot be had except through the Fateleer Remain ono fa' • WRRELY STAR; each icture bears the King's ieutogseph. Tills picture has We • * great merit of being t ie first taken after the King's accession, and has there/ate e an historical yalue that no other picture can posseas. IQUEEN ALEXANDRA..—An exquisitely beautiful picture of the rennet - ably beautilful and goc.i Queen Alexandra, also taken since the Kingas aeeeesion • to the throne. It is the same size DA that of the Klug, 'the two fob:mimes e legend- : some pair of pietures that alone would sell for many times the subsoription 'coke • of paper and pietures. • Noportrait el the King and Consort taken at the second gr succeedingeet. tinge can have one fraction of the value Of blip first. The o go ciewn to Idabel. 4. THE DUCHESS OF DEVONSHIRK—ne Renowned Gainsborough Plc- * tura Sold at auction sale in London twenty -flee years age feu ia.afattDO, ,41 stolen by clever thieves, hidden for over twenty-four years and delivered to 44 X owner on payment of $23,000 reward and since sold to At 3. Pierpont Morgan for • $75.rhis, in brief, is the filetory of one of the premium !ketones, which, by • °levet stroke of euterprise, the publishers of the Family Herald have secured for _• their subscrieers. The pieture is 22xffe in ten oolours, and is reproduced line for ow line, colour for colour with the original. Copies of the reproduction are now old X in New York City, Montreal and Toronto for $12 each, and this is the picturs ; Family Herald eubscribers aro going to get absolutely free together with the pieturesof the King andQueen. Is thab not big value? Call at Tan Teems Office and see samples * of these beautiful pictures. • • great paper the Family Herald for it's 24 pages of general nears and family :reading. Its agricultural pages alone are worth many times the subscription _pricey:A: wane T‘us Exreee TYAMS for the looal news, and you want, that • • 73eleg or send your subscription to THE TIMES OFFICE. • 4•40eo.04)4414...43÷4,00,”.ot4t4.00.444.444044.0,04.0t,w).1,4 cluginoloats&-. :Am mmat. 'R Wt. r- 4 Naltictig.' erv‘. Teotisands of young- and inicIdie-aged men are annuany swept to a peen:tett:re =eve through EARLY INDISCRETION, EXCESSES, A.ND BLOOD. DIISEASES. If you have any of the following symptoms consult us before It is too late. Are you nervous and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks before the eyes with dark circles under them, weak bacieoldneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and losses, sediment in urine, pimples on the face, sunken eyes, hollow cheeks, careworu expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornings, restless nights, changeable moods, weak man. hood, stunted organs,_premature decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat, etc.? Our New Method Treatment will cure you. ENS IFE 1114 Nothing can be more demoralizing to young and middle-aged mon than emissions at night or secret drains through the urine. They unfit a man for business, mar- ried life or social happiness. No nts.tter whether caused by evil habits in youth, natural weakness, or sexual excesses, our New Method Treatment- wilt posi- tively cure you CURES GUARANTEED. NO CURE, NO PAY. igrNO Names Used Without Written Consent. • W. A. Muir, of Lima, 0., sayst—'4I was one of the countless victims of early vice at 15 years of age. The drains on my system were weakening my brain as well as my sexual and. nervous sys. tem. For ten years I tried scores of doctors, electric belts anti patent medicines. Some helped me, none cured. 1 was giving up in despair, in • fact, contemplating MUCide when a friend ad- vised me as a last resort to give the New Method Treatment of Drs. K. Sz K, a fair trial. Without confidence I consentad and th. three months I was a cared malt. I was cured seven years ago—am married and happy. I heartily recommend Drs. K. & K. to my a.ffilcted BeforeTreatment fellowmen." After Treatment iter -We treat and cure Varlcocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases, and all diseases of men and Wonten. na-NO NAMES USED WITel'ouT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of treatment, FREE. < Drs. Kennedy & [Organ, t4.8 SHELBY STREET, DETROIT. MON. •KATAWK4, procession, when countless thou- sands of people will have a fine view of the illumination, by dividing the living stream, one-half going in one direction and the other in another, and allowing them to cross only at given points. On the night of Queeir Vietoria's Diamond Jubilee procession, some of the streets, uota- bly St. !Tames', wore packed with immovable mass of people,- reach- ing from wall to wall, oho, as there was no order, could proceed in /with- er. direction. It was sometimes im- possible to move a dozen yards in as many minutes. Had an accident caused a, panic, the result would have been horrible. `,In view of this experience, the police will now at- tempt to Maintain two distinct streams of people moving in differ- ent directions. CHILD'S DRESS. Simple little dresses with box -plaited backs and sailor collars are mach in vogue for the, little tots of both sexes. To cut this dress ior a ehild 4 years of age 3').-2 yards of Material 27 inehes wide., 2 3-4 yards 32 inebee wide, or 2 1-8 yards 44 inches wide will be required. -- He—"Do you think your mother Will be eurprised ?" $11e—"Yes, deed. She wee only saying this afternoon that she didn't believe you'd ever get up courage to pro- pose," UAVE you " been smolt. in' a good deal lately and feel an occasional twinge of pain roundyburheart? Are you short of breath nerves unhinged, sense - don of pins and needles going ehrough , your arms and. towers? Better take a box or two of IVIiiburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and get cured before things become too serious. As a specific for all heart and nerve troublestheycan- not be excelled. A • true heart tonic, blood enricher and nerve re- newer, they cure nervousness, sleepless- ness, nervous prostration, smoker's heart palpitation of the heart, after effects of la grippe, etc. Priceesocaper box or 3 boXes foe $r.es at all druggists, or will be sent on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co.'Limited. Toronto, Ont. - MOST POPULOUS STBEET. The most populotis Street in the world is said to be that iri New York extending from Amsterdam to West End Aveaue and from Slake - first street to. Sixty-seeond. , thousand sever: hundred human ba- ings, of twenty-six nationalities, of, every rate, color d ancreed, are hucle- dled together in five ancl sio store tenements. a-- Kr.FE COMPETITIONS. A form of sport very popular itt Normandy is that of flying kites, which are, some of them, of very large dimensions. There hes been a competition recently at Rouen ou the heights of St. Catherine, The victorious lcite rose to the height of 8,500 feet, arid would have soared higher but for lack of string. Benovolent 01c1 Gentleman ' 'John- ny, why was Deenoclee afecad to eat his dinner when the sword Was sus- peeded over his heed by a single hair?" johnoy (wbo does ttot like being patronized): "I &pose he Wag afraid the hair would fon Min soup,"